Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.

In order to guarantee the production of feed for ruminant animals, the dry matter (DM) content determination is very common in laboratories routine. For silage samples, part of the fermentation products can be lost by volatilization, therefore, the correction of the DM content is necessary to obtain the appropriate water content. In Europe, the formula determinated by Weissbach and Strubelt (2008) is widely used to correct this variable in corn and grass silage, since it follows a specific drying method, which is described by these authors, however, in Brazil the main methodology used to determine the content of feed DM is the described by Dettman et al. (2014). Despite this, there are few studies comparing these assessment methods to see whether in Brazil, this methodology can or cannot be used to correct the content of DM in silages. Thus, the goal was to assess whether there is a difference in obtaining the DM content with these two methodologies in sorghum silages samples. The field experiment was developed at Embrapa Agrossilvipastoril, while the analyzes were carried out at the Forragiculture Laboratory of the Federal University of Mato Grosso, Campus Sinop-MT. The design used was a 4x2 factorial, with four types of sorghum (Grain - BRS 373; Forage - BRS 658, Biomass - BRS 716; Sweet - experimental access) and two drying methodologies [Dettman et al. (2014): pre-drying in a forced ventilation oven at 55ºC, for 72 h, to determine the DM content of air-dried sample (ASA) and in an oven at 105ºC, for 16 h, to determine the DM content of the oven dried sample (ASE); Weissbach and Strubelt (2008) where the drying is done in a forced ventilation oven at 60ºC, for 18 h (ASA), and in an oven at 105ºC, for 3 h (ASE)]. The definitive DM content was determined by the multiplication of ASA by ASE for both methodologies. The data obtained were subjected to analysis of variance and the means compared by the LSD test, adopting a probability level of 5%. Regarding ASE, an interaction effect between methodology and type of sorghum was observed. However, for ASA and the definitive DM content, only the effect of sorghum purpose was observed, with higher value for grain sorghum, with 37.78 and 35.64% respectively, and lower for biomass sorghum, with 18.72 and 17.49%, respectively. Forage and sweet sorghum had a definitive DM content of 28.90 and 28.55%, respectively. There was no effect of the methodology on the definitive DM value content for all sorghums. We conclude that we can use the methodology of Dettman et al. (2014) for drying silage samples in Brazil and apply the formula for correcting the DM content for volatile compounds used by Weissbach and Strubelt (2008).

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: SILVA, M. E. A. da, SILVA, D. P. S. da, MACEDO, T. de F. de, BEHLING NETO, A., PEREIRA, D. H., TARDIN, F. D.
Other Authors: MARIA EDUARDA ABREU DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DHULYELI PAULA SILVEIRA DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; TAINARA DE FREITAS DE MACEDO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; ARTHUR BEHLING NETO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DALTON HENRIQUE PEREIRA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; FLAVIO DESSAUNE TARDIN, CNPMS.
Format: Anais e Proceedings de eventos biblioteca
Language:Ingles
English
Published: 2021-12-07
Subjects:Sorgo, Silagem, Matéria Seca, Chemical analysis, Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor, Dry matter content,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1137260
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-alice-doc-1137260
record_format koha
spelling dig-alice-doc-11372602021-12-07T18:00:56Z Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages. SILVA, M. E. A. da SILVA, D. P. S. da MACEDO, T. de F. de BEHLING NETO, A. PEREIRA, D. H. TARDIN, F. D. MARIA EDUARDA ABREU DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DHULYELI PAULA SILVEIRA DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; TAINARA DE FREITAS DE MACEDO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; ARTHUR BEHLING NETO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DALTON HENRIQUE PEREIRA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; FLAVIO DESSAUNE TARDIN, CNPMS. Sorgo Silagem Matéria Seca Chemical analysis Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor Dry matter content In order to guarantee the production of feed for ruminant animals, the dry matter (DM) content determination is very common in laboratories routine. For silage samples, part of the fermentation products can be lost by volatilization, therefore, the correction of the DM content is necessary to obtain the appropriate water content. In Europe, the formula determinated by Weissbach and Strubelt (2008) is widely used to correct this variable in corn and grass silage, since it follows a specific drying method, which is described by these authors, however, in Brazil the main methodology used to determine the content of feed DM is the described by Dettman et al. (2014). Despite this, there are few studies comparing these assessment methods to see whether in Brazil, this methodology can or cannot be used to correct the content of DM in silages. Thus, the goal was to assess whether there is a difference in obtaining the DM content with these two methodologies in sorghum silages samples. The field experiment was developed at Embrapa Agrossilvipastoril, while the analyzes were carried out at the Forragiculture Laboratory of the Federal University of Mato Grosso, Campus Sinop-MT. The design used was a 4x2 factorial, with four types of sorghum (Grain - BRS 373; Forage - BRS 658, Biomass - BRS 716; Sweet - experimental access) and two drying methodologies [Dettman et al. (2014): pre-drying in a forced ventilation oven at 55ºC, for 72 h, to determine the DM content of air-dried sample (ASA) and in an oven at 105ºC, for 16 h, to determine the DM content of the oven dried sample (ASE); Weissbach and Strubelt (2008) where the drying is done in a forced ventilation oven at 60ºC, for 18 h (ASA), and in an oven at 105ºC, for 3 h (ASE)]. The definitive DM content was determined by the multiplication of ASA by ASE for both methodologies. The data obtained were subjected to analysis of variance and the means compared by the LSD test, adopting a probability level of 5%. Regarding ASE, an interaction effect between methodology and type of sorghum was observed. However, for ASA and the definitive DM content, only the effect of sorghum purpose was observed, with higher value for grain sorghum, with 37.78 and 35.64% respectively, and lower for biomass sorghum, with 18.72 and 17.49%, respectively. Forage and sweet sorghum had a definitive DM content of 28.90 and 28.55%, respectively. There was no effect of the methodology on the definitive DM value content for all sorghums. We conclude that we can use the methodology of Dettman et al. (2014) for drying silage samples in Brazil and apply the formula for correcting the DM content for volatile compounds used by Weissbach and Strubelt (2008). Evento virtual. 2021-12-07T18:00:48Z 2021-12-07T18:00:48Z 2021-12-07 2021 Anais e Proceedings de eventos In: REUNIÃO ANUAL DA SOCIEDADE BRASILEIRA DE ZOOTECNIA, 56., 2021, Florianópolis. Animal science: challenges in production and sustainability: proceedings... Brasília, DF: Sociedade Brasileira de Zootecnia, 2021. p. 81. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1137260 Ingles en openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language Ingles
English
topic Sorgo
Silagem
Matéria Seca
Chemical analysis
Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor
Dry matter content
Sorgo
Silagem
Matéria Seca
Chemical analysis
Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor
Dry matter content
spellingShingle Sorgo
Silagem
Matéria Seca
Chemical analysis
Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor
Dry matter content
Sorgo
Silagem
Matéria Seca
Chemical analysis
Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor
Dry matter content
SILVA, M. E. A. da
SILVA, D. P. S. da
MACEDO, T. de F. de
BEHLING NETO, A.
PEREIRA, D. H.
TARDIN, F. D.
Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
description In order to guarantee the production of feed for ruminant animals, the dry matter (DM) content determination is very common in laboratories routine. For silage samples, part of the fermentation products can be lost by volatilization, therefore, the correction of the DM content is necessary to obtain the appropriate water content. In Europe, the formula determinated by Weissbach and Strubelt (2008) is widely used to correct this variable in corn and grass silage, since it follows a specific drying method, which is described by these authors, however, in Brazil the main methodology used to determine the content of feed DM is the described by Dettman et al. (2014). Despite this, there are few studies comparing these assessment methods to see whether in Brazil, this methodology can or cannot be used to correct the content of DM in silages. Thus, the goal was to assess whether there is a difference in obtaining the DM content with these two methodologies in sorghum silages samples. The field experiment was developed at Embrapa Agrossilvipastoril, while the analyzes were carried out at the Forragiculture Laboratory of the Federal University of Mato Grosso, Campus Sinop-MT. The design used was a 4x2 factorial, with four types of sorghum (Grain - BRS 373; Forage - BRS 658, Biomass - BRS 716; Sweet - experimental access) and two drying methodologies [Dettman et al. (2014): pre-drying in a forced ventilation oven at 55ºC, for 72 h, to determine the DM content of air-dried sample (ASA) and in an oven at 105ºC, for 16 h, to determine the DM content of the oven dried sample (ASE); Weissbach and Strubelt (2008) where the drying is done in a forced ventilation oven at 60ºC, for 18 h (ASA), and in an oven at 105ºC, for 3 h (ASE)]. The definitive DM content was determined by the multiplication of ASA by ASE for both methodologies. The data obtained were subjected to analysis of variance and the means compared by the LSD test, adopting a probability level of 5%. Regarding ASE, an interaction effect between methodology and type of sorghum was observed. However, for ASA and the definitive DM content, only the effect of sorghum purpose was observed, with higher value for grain sorghum, with 37.78 and 35.64% respectively, and lower for biomass sorghum, with 18.72 and 17.49%, respectively. Forage and sweet sorghum had a definitive DM content of 28.90 and 28.55%, respectively. There was no effect of the methodology on the definitive DM value content for all sorghums. We conclude that we can use the methodology of Dettman et al. (2014) for drying silage samples in Brazil and apply the formula for correcting the DM content for volatile compounds used by Weissbach and Strubelt (2008).
author2 MARIA EDUARDA ABREU DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DHULYELI PAULA SILVEIRA DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; TAINARA DE FREITAS DE MACEDO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; ARTHUR BEHLING NETO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DALTON HENRIQUE PEREIRA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; FLAVIO DESSAUNE TARDIN, CNPMS.
author_facet MARIA EDUARDA ABREU DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DHULYELI PAULA SILVEIRA DA SILVA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; TAINARA DE FREITAS DE MACEDO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; ARTHUR BEHLING NETO, UFMT, Sinop-MT; DALTON HENRIQUE PEREIRA, UFMT, Sinop-MT; FLAVIO DESSAUNE TARDIN, CNPMS.
SILVA, M. E. A. da
SILVA, D. P. S. da
MACEDO, T. de F. de
BEHLING NETO, A.
PEREIRA, D. H.
TARDIN, F. D.
format Anais e Proceedings de eventos
topic_facet Sorgo
Silagem
Matéria Seca
Chemical analysis
Sorghum bicolor subsp. bicolor
Dry matter content
author SILVA, M. E. A. da
SILVA, D. P. S. da
MACEDO, T. de F. de
BEHLING NETO, A.
PEREIRA, D. H.
TARDIN, F. D.
author_sort SILVA, M. E. A. da
title Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
title_short Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
title_full Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
title_fullStr Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
title_full_unstemmed Methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
title_sort methodologies for measuring the dry matter content in samples of different purpose sorghum silages.
publishDate 2021-12-07
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1137260
work_keys_str_mv AT silvameada methodologiesformeasuringthedrymattercontentinsamplesofdifferentpurposesorghumsilages
AT silvadpsda methodologiesformeasuringthedrymattercontentinsamplesofdifferentpurposesorghumsilages
AT macedotdefde methodologiesformeasuringthedrymattercontentinsamplesofdifferentpurposesorghumsilages
AT behlingnetoa methodologiesformeasuringthedrymattercontentinsamplesofdifferentpurposesorghumsilages
AT pereiradh methodologiesformeasuringthedrymattercontentinsamplesofdifferentpurposesorghumsilages
AT tardinfd methodologiesformeasuringthedrymattercontentinsamplesofdifferentpurposesorghumsilages
_version_ 1756027863868375040